Monday, December 29, 2008

Tent

A tent is a shelter consisting of sheets of fabric over or attached to a border of poles or attached to a supporting cable while slighter tents may be free-standing or attached to the ground, large tents are usually anchored using guy ropes tied to stakes or pegs. First used as portable homes by traveling peoples, tents are at the present more frequently used for recreational camping and transitory shelters. Tents range in size from one-person "bivouac" structures for a hiker to sleep in to huge tents capable of seating thousands of people. The mass of this article is concerned with tents used for recreational camping which have sleeping break for one to ten people. Larger tents are discussed in a separate section below.

Tents for recreational camping go down into two categories. Tents intended to be carried by backpackers are the smallest, lightest, and most costly type. Smaller tents may be sufficiently glow that they can be carried for long distances on a touring bicycle, a boat, or even a person's back. Some very specialized tents have spring-loaded poles and can be 'pitched' in seconds, but take rather longer to strike.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Roman traditional houses

Original architecture element and exact to Romanian rustic architecture, the verandah (prispa) is low or high, situated on one side of the house or on of house, with or without a balcony, it dominates and determine the position of the facades, assuring the fluency of the inside and outside spaces (of the house).
Using natural resources-their joining and structure way together with the pure geometric forms of the volume of the walls and roofs, the subtle dosage of the shadow and the light, the harmonic chromatics- all these characteristics are elements in tight association with the nature. The houses, the house-holds, situated at a certain distance from the road, represent interference points of the natural places with those created by man; they are elements that determined the peasant to make a change in the nature through his creative intervention.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Federal architecture

Federal style architecture occurred in the United States between 1780 and 1830, typically from 1785 to 1815. The phase is associated with the early Republic, and the founding of the national institutions of the United States. This same period is associated with the motifs of furniture design, emulating same design principles of the architectural period. The founders of the United States consciously choose to connect the state with the antique democracies of Greece and Rome. This was a intentional and marked contrast with the Gothic style, which was used for many English public buildings and associated with feudalism. Federal styles takes influence from the Georgian Neoclassical style, but differ in its use of plainer surfaces with attenuated detail; it was mainly influenced by the Adam style, an interpretation of Ancient Roman architecture fashionable after the unearthing of Pompeii and Herculaneum. The Bald Eagle was a common symbol used in this style, with the ellipse a frequent architectural motif.